77. Ricardo Pau-Llosa

​In honor of our People Issue, which will hit newsstands and computer screens November 25, Cultist proudly presents "100 Creatives," where we feature Miami's cultural superheroes in random order. Have suggestions for future profiles? Email cultist@miaminewtimes.com with the whos and whys.

Courtesy of Ricardo Pau-Llosa

77. Ricardo Pau-Llosa

At the age of six, poet and art collector Ricardo Pau-Llosa landed on American soil. "We didn't move to the United States or relocate or migrate on a whim, we fled Cuba for our lives." His exile from his native Cuba and the revolution that forced it shaped Pau-Llosa and his work indelibly. "While my poems may be about many things, what drives them is the idea that a modern people who love freedom, however exiled and maligned, live an epic dimension which they ignore at their own peril."

Pau-Llosa managed to thrive on foreign soil, spending time in Chicago and Tampa, until finally reaching the Mecca for all Cuban exiles--Miami. He graduated high school from Belén Jesuit Preparatory School, attended Florida colleges and universities, and eventually established himself as one of the region's foremost poets. Pau-Llosa is not just a poet, however. He is widely recognized for his knowledge of Latin American art, as an art critic, lecturer, art collector, curator, essayist, and short story writer.

"Among my many other blessings was the chance to witness the emergence of a genuine adventure in cultural survival in the Miami of the 1970s, when Cuban exile artists, writers, and musicians got back on their feet and laid the foundations for the pan-Latin American art movement that lasted two decades."

Pau-Llosa's poems have been published in American Poetry Review, Indiana Review, Iowa Review, New England Review, Notre Dame Review, Partisan Review, as well as several anthologies. Of his six books of poetry, Cuba, published by Carnegie Mellon University Press, was nominated for a Pulitzer prize in 1993.

1. List five things that inspire you.

-The bravery of Cuba's dissidents, defying a tyrannical government while the phony champions of the dispossessed--from the Catholic Church to the artists, intellectuals, and journalists on the Left--look the other way.

-Paintings and poems--real ones--which can sustain multiple and complex interpretations and go beyond the personal and the socio-political rant that preoccupies most contemporary critics in the arts.

Thanks to the internet, nothing is frustratingly unknown or hidden in secrecy for long.

[About Miami] That its destiny was to be the first bihemispheric city, where the high, middle, and low cultures of the Americas could converge and mix as equals, but that it chose instead to become an outlet mall with really bad parking.